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Wednesday, January 3, 2018

Gian Francesco Malipiero - String Quartets (Orpheus String Quartet)


Information

Composer: Gian Francesco Malipiero

CD1:
  1. String Quartet No. 1 "Rispetti e strambotti"
  2. String Quartet No. 2 "Stornelli e ballate"
  3. String Quartet No. 3 "Cantàri alla madrigalesca"
  4. String Quartet No. 4
CD2:
  1. String Quartet No. 5 "dei capricci"
  2. String Quartet No. 6 "L'arca di Noè"
  3. String Quartet No. 7
  4. String Quartet No. 8 "per Elizabetta"

Orpheus String Quartet
Charles-André Linale, violin
Emilian Piedicuta, violin
Emile Cantor, viola
Laurentiu Sbarcea, cello

Date: 1991
Label: ASV


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Review

Gian Francesco Malipiero (1882–1973) was born in the same year as Stravinsky and outlived his great contemporary by more than two years. It was a long life, and Malipiero composed a remarkable amount of music. Compared to Stravinsky, he might be thought a minor figure. Yet these recordings present a strong case for remembering his compositions. Though never radical, the string quartets are never dull, and they display a consistent warmth of expression, and a welcome freedom from earnestness, without ever sinking to the level of mere salon music.

By 1920, the year of his First Quartet, Malipiero was a mature and confident artist, aware of recent developments but able to keep his distance from them. The music may call Janacek to mind, but it is a Janacek shorn of his fierce, almost anarchic passion. Malipiero's tendency to expansiveness can prove the enemy of spontaneity: there are times when the music rambles, pleasantly, but superficially. Taking the eight quartets as a whole, however, there is more than enough energy and fantasy to compensate for the occasional lapses into note-spinning.

Malipiero's way of organizing his quartets is also quite distinctive. Rather than adopting the generally-accepted view—that quartets should be in the symphonic mould—his are more like sequences of character pieces run together, with dance-like and song-like episodes held in balance. Nevertheless, the textures are often vigorously contrapuntal, and while darker moods rarely get the upper hand, the astringent harmony (with occasional mock-archaisms, and passages of soaring diatonicism that can even suggest similarities with the earlier Tippett) keeps mere blandness at bay.

The title that most obviously reflects Malipiero's light touch is that of No. 6—Noah's Ark—though it is the pleasure of the animals at being saved from the flood rather than farmyard noises that the music seems to represent. Other titles refer to matters of formal design: the popular poetic forms of No. 1, the Refrains and ballades of No. 2. If I had to choose just one work to represent Malipiero at his best I think it would be No. 7, where sheer force of emotion sweeps across the episodic boundaries. But even towards the end of his life, in the eighth Quartet, Malipiero did not wallow in nostalgia. Hints of Bartok and a passage of mock-academic fugato indicate that his aural imagination was as lively as ever.

The Orpheus Quartet play these capricious, well-shaped compositions with fluent technique and a commendable alertness to the music's many twists and turns. They are quite closely recorded, but the effect is never oppressive, and ASV are to be complimented on their enterprise in opening up another unduly neglected area of twentieth-century repertory.

-- Arnold Whittall, Gramophone

More reviews:
http://www.musicweb-international.com/classrev/2000/nov00/malipiero.htm
https://www.amazon.com/Malipiero-String-Quartets-Gian-Francesco/dp/B0000030PZ

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Gian Francesco Malipiero (18 March 1882 – 1 August 1973) was an Italian composer, musicologist, music teacher and editor. Malipiero studied mostly with Marco Enrico Bossi. In 1913, Malipiero moved to Paris, where he attended the première of Stravinsky's Le Sacre du Printemps, and after that, repudiated almost all the compositions he had written up to that time. Malipiero had an ambivalent attitude towards the Austro-German musical tradition, and was strongly critical of sonata form. His orchestral works include seventeen compositions he called symphonies, of which however only eleven are numbered.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gian_Francesco_Malipiero

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A truly international ensemble (Finnish, American, Dutch and Rumanian), the Orpheus Quartet has met with international acclaim since its founding in 1986. It has given tours through North America, Europe, and Asia both as a unit and as collaborator with many of the world’s finest chamber musicians. The Orpheus Quartet also works toward commissioning and playing contemporary music, as well as unusual and sometimes forgotten compositions. Its current members include: Mark Gothoni, Timothy Summers (violins), Emile Cantor (viola) and Laurentiu Sbarcea (cello).
http://www.orpheus-quartet.com/

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FLAC, tracks
Links in comment
Enjoy!

5 comments:

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    Replies
    1. Hi Ronald,
      I've heard the string quartets are excellent. Can these links be updated? Thank you.

      Delete
  2. This comment has been removed by the author.

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  3. Choose one link, copy and paste it to your browser's address bar, wait a few seconds (you may need to click 'Continue' first), then click 'Free Access with Ads' / 'Get link'. Complete the steps / captchas if require.
    Guide for Linkvertise: 'Free Access with Ads' --> 'I'm interested' --> 'Install and Open ...', but quickly cancel the software download, then wait for a few seconds --> 'Get Website'

    https://link-hub.net/610926/malipiero-string-quartets
    or
    https://uii.io/DzW7rYL
    or
    https://exe.io/BZbUU

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